The NCAA may finally have another witness in its two-year case against Miami.

Roberto Torres, the chief financial officer for former Miami booster Nevin Shapiro’s failed business venture turned Ponzi scheme, has backed up all of Shapiro’s claims of cash and benefits given to Miami players.

One problem for the NCAA: Torres, like Shapiro, is a convicted felon—and the NCAA’s case against Miami is now based on two convicted felons who concocted a billion dollar Ponzi scheme.

According to The Miami Herald, Torres gave a deposition last month at a federal prison in New Jersey that supports all of Shapiro’s claims, including allegations of parties on Shapiro’s yacht. At one point Torres was asked by a Miami attorney how he knew Shapiro used the yacht to recruit Miami athletes, Torres said, “Because Shapiro told me; because I saw them on the boat; because I saw the pictures of all of them in the boat; because (Shapiro sports agency partner) Michael Huyghue mentioned that about the boat; because the captain spoke about the UM athletes … there were several.”

Torres’ testimony can be used by the NCAA, which earlier this year announced that it had illegally procured testimony from Huyghue and former Miami assistant equipment manager Sean Allen by working with Shapiro’s attorney during depositions for Shapiro’s bankruptcy case. The NCAA eliminated any evidence it received from those depositions.